The World of Nagaraj

R.K. Narayan

Having inherited a comfortable income, Nagaraj leads an easygoing life.
He spends an hour a day sitting on his pyol, wearing ochre robes, he works
for free doing the accounts for his friend Coomar's sari shop, he eats
in his favourite cafe, he gossips with his neighbour the Talkative Man,
and he plans to write a book about the sage Narada.

Though loveable, Nagaraj is ineffectual. He is forever planning snappy
responses or forceful actions he never finds the courage to carry out.
He is rattled by changes to his routine, or even just finding himself in
an unfamiliar part of town. He is unable to stand up to his wife Sita,
his brother Gopu, or his nephew Tim, even when Tim's wife Saroja's
harmonica-playing destroys the peace of his home. And, though he
eventually succeeds in finding the right stationery, his plans to write
about Narada never come to much, between his own fecklessness and the
uncooperativeness of the pundits he has to work with.

Mostly told through dialogue, The World of Nagaraj is a portrait
of Nagaraj and the people around him, and through them of the town of
Malgudi. Narayan's characters are memorable and unique, but so solidly
placed in their settings that they seem almost inevitable.